"See who I brought you?" says the tall, 26-year-old rapper on a recent visit to the Advance. "Who reps Staten better than Lu?"

Standing with the New Brightonite are two reality TV stars: Babs, aka Lynese Wiley, a Brooklyn rapper who was on P. Diddy’s "Making the Band 2," and Flo, an Eltingville resident who can be seen every Tuesday on the Oxygen Network’s new season of "Bad Girls Club."

Flo and Babs are Lu’s partners in Hit City Records, a kitchen table label that will release recordings from all three artists over the next several weeks. On Dec. 17, the trio will perform at pool hall and growing performance space Port Richmond Imporium. Next up, they appear Dec. 18 at Duvet in Manhattan.

It’s not surprising that Hefner is friends with these two women — the young man seems to frequent the NYC clubs on the regular, and always has some celebrity collaboration cooking. But this time his swagger may result in some substance. At the very least, Hefner’s new teammates have some interesting things to say about their own material.

"What is my music like?" says Babs, 30, who made headlines even after her 15 minutes on TV for altercations in a Brooklyn club in 2008. "I call it gumbo, because I do it all."

Babs’ release under Hit City, titled "Babs Bunny Presents: Wave Music," will be followed with a debut R&B and rock recording from Flo, featuring a song called "Cold Day in Hell."

"It’s about how if you screw me over, I won’t call you back," says Florina Kaja, 27, who recently moved to Eltingville from St. George. "I wanted to go on ‘Bad Girls’ show because I’m bisexual, and I wanted to represent bi people."

Now that Kaja’s show is done taping, she’s hoping to stretch out her time in the public eye. Her ultimate fantasy? To have a bisexual dating show on Oxygen called "Goin’ With The Flo."

Hefner says that the label will start up in earnest in early 2010, but his own mixtape, which features cuts with Flo and Babs, will be out by the end of December.

"There’s not that many real artists coming out of Staten Island," says Hefner, whose real name is Luis Gondola. "Sure, when I go and do interviews on the radio, when I go anywhere, I give a shout out to Wu-Tang Clan, but what about us? We represent a new group of Staten Island people breaking out — a new generation of people trying to make it."